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Thursday, August 05, 2010

Rules and methi kofta

Rules, especially in this part of the world that I live in, are meant to be broken. If there is a No-parking board on the road, chances are you will find that it is surrounded by parked vehicles. If there is a No-entry sign, you will find vehicles making a detour through that road. Now, one of the first things we learn while beginning to drive is that, if you want to turn right, you switch on the right indicator....or in the absence of it, stick your arm out and point to the right....or do the same thing with your left arm/left indicator if you want to turn left. Apparently, MTC bus drivers either were not told of this rule, or they are a confused lot who can't distinguish between left and right. It is always better to give MTC buses a wide berth.....you never know in which direction they might move. The bus in front of you might be at the right most corner of the road, with the right indicator flashing, and then, before you know it, the driver might make a W...I...D....E turn to the left. On Indian roads, might is right....and there's nothing mightier than a bus that is overcrowded with five times the number of people it is built to accommodate.Which rules, when broken, make your blood boil? Now, on to a recipe, where the only rules is Dig in with gusto!!!Methi koftas(Recipe source : Mallika Badrinath's 100 Delicious Vegetarian Curries)What you need:

Mix gram flour, turmeric powder and salt with curd to make a thick paste. Heat a tsp of oil. Add cumin seeds and methi leaves. Fry for a minute or two till the leaves start to soften. Reduce the flame and add the flour paste. Keep stirring until it forms a thick mass. Once cool, mix in the garam masala and shape into balls.After shaping into koftas, I used a paniyaram pan to fry these. You can deep fry in hot oil if that is what you choose to do, but believe me, there is no difference in the taste and this way, you use very little oil.Add a little oil to each of the depressions in the pan and fry the koftas for a few minutes until the bottom starts to turn brown.Turn over and fry until the other side turns crisp and brown.Arrange the koftas in a serving dish and set aside.For the gravy:Grind together 1 onion, 2 tomatoes, a small piece of ginger, a green chilli, 1/2 tsp of dhania, 1/4 tsp of turmeric powder, a little sugar, salt, and red chilli powder.Heat 2 tsp of oil in a kadai. Add the ground paste to it and fry on low flame until the raw smell is gone. Add a little water if you feel that it has become too thick.Just before serving, pour this gravy on top of the koftas and garnish with corriander leaves.Serve with parathas or rotis.This goes to Divya's Show me your curry event.

I understand and completely agree with you. If it is of any consolation,in the country now I live in breaking rules is a rule rather exception...especially while driving. Makes me wonder why they have to mark lanes on roads at all.I have that book too, yet to try the kofta in the appa kaaral...they seem to have turned out perfect.

I can empathize with how things are in Chennai.. if it makes you feel any better, there is a quite a bit of rule breaking where I live too. Only the levels vary. Right now, what gets me really annoyed is when people drive while talking on the phone/texting.

Lol on the saliva reflex! What amazes me even more is the way in which some people act in the US and then back home in India. They seem so decent in the US and when they are in India it is like they are starting to get their antics out.